When shopping on amazon, if something comes in a variety of colors or designs, check them all. There’s often one option that is way cheaper than the rest, or has a checkbox coupon you can use, for various reasons.
It’s usually an unpopular color or design, but if you don’t care what it looks like, you can get stuff for really cheap. My whole basement floor is covered in area rugs and runners that all cost me less than $10 each because I didn’t care what they looked like.
I have a slow leak in the tire of my plow truck. Using one of those lug wrenches that look like a big x or + (fits 4 different sized lug nuts) I could NOT get the lug nuts to budge.
I drafted my wife to help. She would put all here weight on one side, and I would pull up with everything I had on the other. Not working.
But, I have a hydraulic bottle jack. Hmmm, says I.
I put the piston of the jack under the arm of the lug wrench that needed to go up. I put my wife in charge of the jack. I pushed down on the other arm and kept the lug wrench secure on the lug nut.
Sure enough, 6 tons of force did it, broke the lug nuts free. I was worried that the lug wrench was gonna snap, but it stayed intact.
It’s a sweet sound to hear that ‘crack’ when the lug nut broke free.
And I’ll add a spatial ‘salute’ to the guy that used an air gun to over tighten these.
I know exactly what you’re talking about, and you used a very creative method to accomplish the job. Your x-wrench must be extremely solid, not like the cheapies that used to be sold at Wal-Mart.
A suggestion: if there is a next time, try using a product called Liquid Wrench penetrating oil. That shit works amazingly well.
Thanks. I used to do a lot of jeeping. You often have to come up with creative ways to get out of trouble. All you have is you and your buddies. I didn’t have any pipe to make an extra leverage advantage on the x-wrench. Buying that would have been the next step.
I was rather surprised the x-wrench took that pressure.
This truck is chained up on all four. taking them off is easy enough. Putting them back on is a real job. So I was not wanting to take the whole truck to a tire shop. That’s a 45 minute drive, one way.
Yeah, I use PB Blaster. Otherwise known as Panther Piss.
Agreed. Put a translucent bag over the end and it works even better.
I used to do a lot of international travel to places which did not have hotels. Bar soap does NOT travel well. I switched to body wash and that was better but I had to deal with the hassle of two bottles. I tried mixing body wash with shampoo but discovered I couldn’t tell the difference between the two.
I just use cheap shampoo now. One bottle to wash everything.
Cling wrap has long been a pantry staple in my house. I. Microwave with it, cover leftovers with it, wrap up produce with it. A chef once told me to wrap it well and tightly to secure freshness. Bah scallions go limp, can still smell the cut onions wrapped in it.
What did we ever do before plastic wrap, I ran out and found out. We used aluminum foil. And it works so much better than wrap and keeping produce fresher longer. Lettuce, ginger, onions, parsley, all wrapped in foil and staying fresh for weeks!
But I can’t tell any of the foil wrapped veggies apart in the crisper. So now I remember why plastic wrap got popular, no more mystery packages.
NTL going forward I will continue to use foil for prolonging freshness.
The plastic bags that contain the cereal in cereal boxes work. They’re translucent so you can at least see the color of what’s in them.
The aluminized bags that chips come in also block almost any smell as long as you close them carefully and completely. Either wash the bags out or wrap the veggies in plastic wrap so they don’t get salty.
I use Jewel’s Splenda equivalent, and the aluminized bag even has a ziplock to seal it!
That’s a good tip though I don’t keep cereal in the house much anymore
Never thought to reuse bags like that for food storage. Sure I’ll use them to collect debris from kitchen prep. I can just see my spouse sticking a hand into a chip bag and coming out with chopped onions.
I Googled NTL and came up with stuff like the National Thoroughbred League, etc. What did you mean by NTL? In my opinion, it helps when folks spell these things out in their post (but maybe I just spaced some super-obvious initialism like ‘USA’).
Strangely, I’ve found that bar soap travels better than liquid: no chance of leaks or burst bottles. You can get small plastic clamshell containers that perfectly hold a full-size bar of soap; put that in a freezer quart Ziplock and it’ll travel fine without any danger of making a mess. If you’re 100% sure the soap is dry going into its container then you can skip the Ziplock.
However, for liquid soap while traveling, nothing beats Dr. Bronners. Works as a good shampoo and a fine body wash, and in a pinch can be used to do laundry or the dishes. I always travel with a small bottle (in addition to my bar of Dial Gold).
I was reading through this and kept on expecting the punchline to be that the nuts were threaded left-handed. You find those sometimes on wheels (on one side of the vehicle), because operation of the vehicle tends to stress them in ways that would rotate the nuts counterclockwise, which would loosen normal nuts.
The three places where you’ll find left-handed threads are on some things that rotate like that (I’ve also seen it on fans and bicycle pedals), turnbuckles and related devices, and on plumbing intended for use with pure oxygen (because you do NOT want to ever use ordinary plumbing for that).
I know who she’s addressing with “ILMVI” . I was referring to when ILMVI politely asked her what NTL meant and she got snarky. I’ve never run across NTL before.